PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
.'Sttattantttto News 'tfJS News
. sTBANK JKXXINS MALCOLM EPLET
"gditS? Managing Ml lor
a. Mmsonrj combination ol the Evening Herald end tho
SlathNaws. Published ovary afternoon xcpt Sunday
It E.iaedoand Pin. streeta. Klamath Falls. Oregon, by tho
jAJiudblUhlng Co. and Ih.Niwi Publishing Company.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
a carrier month TSo By may
- , (. r7M H mm ii
S month! I3.XI
Xt WHTrf" Modoc siclyou coun'le. 17.00
ma aacond elan mattar at thi poatorflce of Klamath
Mainber.
Aaaocuud
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
WITH political activity on the rise on the
national, state and local scenes, it's about
time to remind Klamath basin people that
proper registration is an essen
tial preliminary to voting in
the general election in No
vember. There are a great many new
people in this county this year,
and there are many older resi
dents who have changed place
of residence within the past
two years. People In both
classifications should register
or adjust their registrations.
. Persons just reaching voting
e." of course, must get their
names on the registration books, and persons
who failed to vote two years ago will have
to re-register if they expect to re-assume their
citizenship responsibilities.
The county clerk's office is the place to
register, and the books are open now. We are
not going to give the deadline date in this
piece, because a lot of people who ought to
register now would yawn and put it off. Pro
crastination, we happen to know through per
sonal experience, is a common human trait.
Getting ready for an election is a big job
at the county clerk's office. The work piles up
as election time nears This work is going to
develop earlier this year because of the soldier
balloting program. A late registration rush will
add to the problem at the clerk's office, and it
will bring inconvenience to the public through
delay at the registration desk during rush
, periods.
That is one good reason for taking care of
the registration detail NOW.
e
Vote In Heme Precinch.
WE know a considerable number of people
who formerly lived in Klamath Falls,
and now have moved outside the corporate
limits into the pleasant suburbs. So far as we
know, all of these people would vote the way
We will in the oity election, so what we are
ffnln? tn sav is not intended to eliminate eitv
voters because they disagree with us. It is
imply an effort on our part to promote legal
registration for voting.
: For any person who resides outside the cor
porate limits of Klamath Falls is not legally
justified in voting on city measures and of
fices. Those matters should be determined by
voters within the city. Therefore, it is the
duty of people who previously lived in town,
ctut have moved outside, to re-register 'in the'
precinct of their residence, which will not have
the city ballot on election day.
Likewise, people who have moved about in
side the city should re-register in their new
precinct to avoid voting for councilman from a
ward in which they do not live.
This paper has campaigned for re-registration .
according to residence for a number of years,
and we believe much progress has been made
In that direction. However, this is a detail
that newly moved people may overlook, and all
tljat is intended here is a gentle reminder,
'
Briefs From the Pocket- File
IT WAS just our luck to be out of town
Saturday night when those boys were hand
ing out $20 bills . . . Wilfred E. Lamm, the
Modoc Point lumberman who will close his mill
nejrt month, is the Klamath district's leading
lumber industry historian ... He presented an
excellent paper on the subject at a meeting of
the Paughters of the American Revolution here
some time ago, and is now expanding his re
search even further . . . A few people here-
vpuuw wm remernrjer ine long iigm we all
rnade to get the underpass built on Main street
at the Southern Pacific tracks . . . It has
certainly justified itself in this war period as a
traffic facility on the Marine Barracks route
as well as East Main street . . . Wartime rail
road traffic being what it is, a grade crossing
on Main street now would be a horrible prob
lem . , . Anyone who would grouch about the
weather in this country this season should be
sentenced to Washington, D. C., for seven full
summers . . . Even so, we know several gents
who are trying to get themselves committed
for six years to the senatorial institution there.
w W
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, August 22 The left wing
political aggressors (the Pepper-Truman-Hillman-CIO
crowd) tried to find Mr, Roosevelt
for leadership and support
when their Murray-Kilgore
bill and its $35-a week federal
unemployment pension for
war workers was sinking to
defeat in the senate.
He was nowheao .to "be lo
catedon that subject at that
time. He was traveling, or
he was busy, or telephone con
nections were busy. They
never got him. At least so
thv now sav in nrivate.
Their story leaves the bur- MALLON
den for promoting that unpopular notion of a
a greater relief for high salaried war work
ers than soldiers will get, upon the drooped
shoulders of Senator Truman, the vice-presidential
candidate. Vice presidential candidates and
vice presidents exist chiefly to take blame (see
career of Vice President Wallace).
It is difficult to believe a fresh vice presi
dential candidate would take such responsibility
of fostering such legislation without orders from
the top, but Truman is being quoted in the
usual off-the-record way that always leaks out,
to the effect that he alone was responsible.
Fate Worse Than Death
WHATEVER Mr. Roosevelt now says or
whatever is done, the Murray-Kilgore
bill, accordingly, is doomed to fate worse than
death also in the house.
The ways and means chairman, Mr. Dough
ton, will not take it, and yet he has been in
no hurry about the George substitute bill which
would make the existing social security set-up
take care of post-war unemployment through
state action (maximum payment about 518 a
week, average $13-14).
War Economic Administrator Jimmy Byrnes
may not have told the Doughton committee in
executive session that he was quitting his right
hand job to the president in anger, as has
been reported by one newspaper. Other papers
did not pick up that possibility apocryphal
story because they could not fully confirm it.
His hearers seem agreed Byrnes at least said
he would not be the post-war demobilizer al
though he now has that title by presidential
award, and he sharply opposed the Murray
Kilgore bill, championed by the vice presiden
tial candidate.
'
To Quit Righthanding
ALSO, a South Carolina newsman, friendly
to Byrnes, earlier wrote for their native
state papers that he would quit all his right
handing for the White House January 1,. and
retire to private law practice, an amazing sug
gestion for a man who relinquished a life term
on the supreme bench to be of war service
to the president.
Byrnes received personal treatment at the
Chicago convention which has not yet been
publicly appreciated. He went to Chicago with,
more votes than anyone else had for the vice
presidential nomination, including Wallace.
Mayor Ed Kelly was privately for him. Boss
Hague was willing, but Flynn was doubtful.
In the midst of promotion work for him
(and he would have been nominated, in my
opinion), he suddenly withdrew.
Observers blamed CIO's" Hillman ' and' his
related negro group, whose policy was that no
southerner could be chosen. It is hardly con
ceivable to me that Byrnes would have retired
without instructions from, the only man who
is his boss.
'-
New Aggressors
THUS is the way of the new aggressors in
politics, the CIO-Hillman leadership, meet
ing inner defeat within the party of its choice.
Indeed, valid question now is arising whether
Hillman can control the CIO, or whether his
overzealous-overiinanced leadership may de
moralize his own union.
- At Salt Lake City, CIO locals 65 Bauer and
872 Toele broke from the Hillman leadership.
Their members resigned from CIO-PAC, an
nouncing: "We feel that regardless of belonging to any
committee, church, union or other organization,
no one has the right to demand that we vote
the straight democratic ticket. This action
frees us to work and vote throughout the
state for the candidates we feel will best rep
resent us."
A CIO worker in East Moline, Illinois, has
complained I have committed an injustice to
CIO members by assuming Hillman was their
leader, saying:
"I had no more part in having Hillman and
his committee appointed or paying them than
you have in appointing supreme court judges,
and don't like them any better."
Strong-arm John Lewis could not control I113
mine workers' vote four years ago. Wise, old
Labor Sage Sam Gompers once said:
"No one can control the labor vote."
This may apply to Hillman.
SIDE . GLANCES
( LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FHANCISCO. Aug. 22
4P-WTACattIe: 3oo. Active, ge"
Vi'lS ,!dy- Monday. steers mostly
JH.00-14.75, good fed kinds quoted J15.00.
Today, package 550 lb. medium heifers
f I .9 . God range cows quoted 512.00
3j.0. few common cows $9.00-9.50, cut
ters S8.00-8.50. canners S5.50-6.50. Com
mon lightweight bulls $0.00-9.50. Calves:
0. Steady; good to choice vealers
t,w -vw. mwium 9iu.uu-iie.uu.
Hogs: 250.
Generally steady on two
,uu aouii u cnoice igu-2?u in. narrows
and gUts at- $15.75; sows sharply sl.00
higher, bulk $13.00.
Sheep: 2000. Largely ewes. Late
Monday. lamba weak to 50 cents lower,
raany decka medium to good S10.50
. lyo, choice scarce, quoted up to $13.50.
Apeut 900 head common to medium
yearlings $s.so-9.50. About 450 cull to
gofd awes $1,00-4.50. Good clearance.
. PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 22 (AP-WFA1
Salable cattle 100. total 250: salable
calves 50. total 100: market moderately
active, about steady; common grass
tears $8.00-11.00; medium heifers $10.50;
built common $7.00.10.00;- common-medium
calves $6.75-8.75; cannor-cutters
$4.50-8.50; medium-good bulls $7.50-9.00;
gaad-cholce vealers $14.00-15.00: common,
medium $10.00-13.50; market late Monday
weak to unevenly lower on medium-
good grass steers: other classes stiaifv
;j0-50: two loads short fed steers
salable hogs 450. total 700: market
",?a!?':.t?p 15-75 on good-choice
lf2"i!0 Jb- butchers: 241-270 lbs mostly
$15.00; heavier weights $13.50-14.00: few
head UD tO $14.50! llirht Hahf t1?ln.
14.50: sows largely $12.00-50: choice light
aiVSn lew good seeder pigs
salable sheep 300, total 400: market
slow; opened about steady; some bids
weak on plainer grades: good-choice
102 lb. wooled spring lamba $12.75: few
common-medium $10.50: good-choice
Bin, spring lamrjs 910-00-00; some on
feeder order $6.00-8.00: odd heed
wllm" $10.00; medlum.good shorn
CHICAGO, Aug. 22 IAP-OTA1-Salable
nogs 13,000: total 17.300: active, fully
steady: food and rhnio 1M.94A ihm
$14.75; weights over 240 lbs. and most
scattering good grade 120
140 lbs. $13.00-14.00; complete clearance
Salable CaH! ttWf a.t.hla IflM
fed steers and yearling slow, steady to
weak; common light slaughter steers
vcijr uun; uuiK an grades aij.au.i.To;
.ui ,io.., neuers in iBiny nroau oe
mand at $13.00-16.75: choice heien inn.
ped at $17.25: cows fully steady, most
beef cows $7.75-10.75: strictly goad
r-A Gem of Thought From Idella's n
There was a Baker named Ed
Whose customer found a fly in her raiiin bread.
When she kicked io the Baker
He said, "You old trouble maker.
Bring back the Fly and get a raisin instead.
Aeroplane Glue . . . . . . . 10c
phon. 846e A T IDELLA'S
What A Qal!
Montana! $13.23: light canners $4.75
$.25; bulls steady to easy, mostly $8.00
10.00 on grassy sausage offerings; veal
ers steady at $15.00 down; stock cattle
very scarce.
Salable sheen 4000; total 6500: medium
to choice spring lambs active, mostly
25 cents higher, cull and common kind
slow, steady; eight double good and
choice around 85 lb. Washington spring
lambs $16.00 straight: early sales good
and choice native springers $14.40 mostly
to $14.50, some native springers held
above $14.75: medium and good $13.00
14.00. cull and common $6.00-9.50; scat
tered early sales shorn natives ewes
about steady at $4.75 down.
The young of the black bear
are no larger than a cantaloupe
when born.
Coee. is4 ayim ttawct. mc. T. st tin, t). $. T. Off.
"Lois of people sny she'd be a success in opera, but her
father and I don't know any people in that business to
help her get started 1"
Armed Service Personnel
Fill Out Christmas List
By MARGARET KERNODLE
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (P)
Service men and women over
seas have decided what they
want for Christmas.
Soldiers in all theaters would
like money orders and wallets,
pipes and tobacco, razor blades
ana small snaving Kits, dockci-
sized books and photographs in
waterproof folders, cigarettes
and cigars, automatic pencils,
stationery, games, cards, puzzles,
hard candy, soap, dried lruii,
vacuum-packed nuts and wrist
watches, the office of war in
formation reports.
Sailors everywhere want
pocket-sized dictionaries, novels,
mysteries, westerns and humor
but no war stories; sneakers for
showers and moccasin-type bed
room slippers; pocket knives
with attachments; Bibles, alarm
clocks, playing cards, dice, poker
chips, insect repellents, small
snapshots, toilet kits and shaving
Kits, toot powder, sunglasses,
fountain pens, writing pads,
fruit cake, tinned luxury foods
like olives, sardines, nuts; coat
hangers, wash cloths, small
homemade personal articles,
steel mirrors and favorite tobac
co mixtures.
Army nurses want washable
Brunch coats, clothes pins, but
tons, needles, thread, mending
equipment, lingerie, bobby pins,
hairnets, elastic, cosmetics of all
kinds, tinned delicacies, hard
candies and nuts in tins, tinned
biscuits, scented soaps, khaki
neckties of wool-rayon.
Navy nurses would like
Christmas decorations and birth
day decorations for parties,
starch, silk stockings of white,
black or beige, underclothes
which don't have to be ironed,
play shoes, sneakers, boudoir
slippers, bathing suits, records
and sheet music, books', ker
chiefs, sports equipment, mag
azine subscriptions.
WACS want sheer stockings
first of all, also zippers and
elastic girdles.
OW1 offered the reminder
that overseas gifts should be sent
between September 13 and Oc
tober 15 and marked "Christmas
parcel."
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK, Aujr. 33 (APj Stock,
generally milled over an irrecularly
lower route In today's markat without
bringing out any real liquidation or
changing the long-run buliiib Investment
concept.
Closing quotation:
American Can 91H
Am Car 8c Fdy . 40V
Am Tel & Tel ; . . , 163H
Anaconda ,...,.,...,.' 2G!i
Calif Packing --. 2ft '
ia. Tractor . ...............
Commonwealth & Sou
Curtis-Wright
General Electric
General Motors
Gt Nor By pfd .
Illinois Central .
Int Harvester
Kennecott .
Lockheed
Looff-Bell "A" -.,
Montgomery Ward
.... 38
. 33 ' 4
. 17',
N Y Central
Northern Pacific ...
Pac Gas A El .,.-....
Packard Motor
Penna R R
Pcpubllc Steel
Fichffeld Oil
Sdfeway Stores
Sears Roebuck .J..
Southern Pacific
Standard Brands M.
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America .
Union Oil Calif
Union Pacific ,
U S Steel
Warner Pictures .........
o,
, SO',
lfl's.
IB
. 32V.
If)',,
10
82
1W4
29
, 30 V
. 10
84
19','i
...100".
34 i
13
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Aug. 22 (AP-WFA) Pota
toes, arrivals 107: on track 111' tMnt
U. S. shipments 312; supplies fairly heavy;
ur i sir wcaicrn hock aemana gooa,
market firm at ceilings; for central
western stock and northern unwashed
Triumphs demand slow, market weaker;
Idaho Bliss Triumphs ana Ruset Bur
banks U. S, No. 1. S3.6A: Washington
Long Whites U. S. No. i, $3,84: Colorado
Bliss-Triumphs U. S. No. 1. $3.49; Wis
consin Triumphs commercials 2.65; Cob
blers U. S. No. 1, S3. 00; North Dakota
Red River Valley section Bliss Triumphs
commercials S2.25-3.7fl: South Dakota
Bliss Trlumnha IJ. s Nn 1. a.1.12? r.nm.
merclals S2..W-00: Nebraska Red Warbas
U. S. No. I. S3.60-S0; Bliss Triumphs
v. o. no. i. 9a.oo'ia.
VITAL STATISTICS
ROSS Bom at Klamath Vallty hos
pital, Klamath rails. Or., on August
21. IMS. to Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd H. Ross.
Chlloauln. a girl. Weight: 4 pounds IS
ounces.
RUSHING Born at Klamath Valley
hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore., on August
33. 14. to Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Rushing.
Route 3. Box 1ST. a girl. Weight: S
pounds O' ounces.
VAN HARDKNBERG Born at Klam
ath Valley hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore.,
on August 21. 1944. to Mr. and Mrs.
A. W. Van Hardenberg. 3119 Maryland,
a boy. Weight: 7 pounds ou, ounces.
FUNERAL
JACKSON f JACK) H. HORTON
Funeral services for the late Jackson
'Jack! S. llorton, who passed away at
his home In Bonanza Sunday, August 20,
1044, following an Illness of three weeks,
will be held tn the chapel of the Carl
Whit! or k Funeral home. Pine at Sixth,
on Wednesday. A "Trust 23. 1PM at 1:30
p. m. with the Rev, Victor Phillips of
the Tint Methodist church of this city
officiating. Commitment services and
interment family plot In Bonanza cem
etery at 3 p. m. Friends are Invited.
WHEAT
United States marines served
continuously in the Republte o(
Nicaragua irom luzu to 11M3.
You Can't
Keep a
Good One
Quiet!
Drinks sparkle out loud when they're
mixed with Canada Dry Water. Itg
"Pin-Point Carbona- biq 8oniE
ON"insurelivelin,es . f,5
to the last ip. . Plus dspoilt
CANADA DRY WATER
im. i 1
ml Ml
CHICAGO. Aug. 22 'APt-Rye futures
lost part of their gains today, dipping
more than a cent a bushel at times on
selling Inspired partly by the weak cot
ton and stock markets. Wheat and oats
fell in sympathy.
Commission house and local liquida
tion depressed rye prices. Houses with
northwestern and southwestern connec
tions were reported selling December
and September wheat, respectively.
Locals and commission houses alio sold
oaU, and demand appeared limited.
Wheat closed to 1W cent lower.
September SI. 94. eats ware off '4 to
c. September 71 c. rye was unchanged
to I'nc down, Seotember SI.WWj. and
barley was unchanged to ie lower.
September l-14. .
Britain's present scourge of
robot bombs, those deadly aim
less missiles of a frustrated Hit
ler, carry a grim foreboding to
an America whose ocean bar
riers will no longer serve to pro
tect us. Lt.-Gen. Ben Lear.
llervous.Restless
Ol "CERTAIN DAYS" Of The Menth?
If functional pertoctla disturbance
make you feel nervous, tired, restles,
"dragged out"- at such time try a
mou$ Lydla B. plnkhtm's Vegetable
Compound to relieve tuob symptoma. tt
7ie(p nature Plnkbem'i Compound Im
leo a grand atomachlo tonto. Follow
label directions. Worth trying
LYDIA E. PINKHAH'S Wi!
STARK SPEAKS
HISTORY
OF JAYGEES
At Ilia first tri-monlltly dinner
mcctlnit lionoi'lnA now member,
Klnninth Junior chnmbor of com
merce members nnd their wives
henrd Secretary Charles Stunt
of tlio senior chamber of com
mcrco outline tlio history nnd
alms of tlio Jityceo oriinnlznllnii
from Us inception In 1015. The
meetliiK win held nl the Pcltcim
cafe Monday night.
About 75 Jaycces and their
wives attended the event, which
was under tlio direction or mil
Bratton.
Other speukors of the evenhiK
included Troy Cook, who out
lined the events hi the meeting
of tlio National Junior chamber
of commerce directors at Omaha
last month. Cook urged stroiiH
ly tlio greater cooperation Willi
the national organization.
Paul Lee, former president of
the state organization, novo an
outline of Jaycec aims nnd
stressed the fact that a strong
national group depends upon
strong and active local nnd state
chapters.
Palrlcin Brown, alternato Miss
Klamath queen, was encored for
a third vocal selection nt the
start of the dinner meeting, and
Corporal Bill Stein of the ma
rines, rendered several piano se
lections. Bill Bratlon, who acted as
master of ceremonies, told the
group that last night's meeting
was Just the first of a series oY
such get-togethers and another
would be held in three months.
P
WASHINGTON. Aug. 22 M)
The house ways and menus com
mittee today struck from the
senate approved demobilization
and reconversion bill all provi
sions for postwar retraining and
reemployment of civilian work
ers. The action eliminates, sub
ject to future house action, the
senate provision for transporta
tion costs of up to $200 for re
turn of migrated civilian work
ers and their families "to the lo
cation of their bona fide resi
dence." This docs not, however, dls
turb the wartime retraining and
reemployment program created
by executive order and headed
by Brig. Gen. Frank T. Mines.
Likewise retraining and reem
ployment of war veterans were
not disturbed.
4-H Victory GarB
bhow, selection of
Ruler Scheduled
The third 4-lt Victory Oardeij
show will bo held at the Alta
mont Junior high school, Satur
day, August 20, from 8 a. m. to
5 p. m. The third 411 Victory
Garden king or queen will be
crowned at tlio show on thin
date.
Tlio Garden club king or queen
contest is sponsored by the Klam
ath Herald ami News and all
4-H club victory gardeners are
eligible for tills honor. A. 11.
Bussman of Murphy s Hood store
and George Peters, local 4-H club
agent will score the gardens,
using a point system. The boy
or girl having the highest score
will receive tlio honor of being
king or queen.
Chairman of the garden show
this year will bo K. K. Kvnns of
Merrill, Members of his com
mittee lire Tom llcmlugcr, Mrs.
C. Thurmun, Mrs. M. Gcbhart and
K. D. Hodman. Registration
chairman for the show will be
Marjorle Schullz. Tho exhibits
at tho show will bo Judged by
Prof, A. G. B. Bouquet of Oregon
State college, who will be pres
ent for this occasion.
A copy of the premium list has
been scut out tn each 4-H club
mcmbor enrolled in the project,
giving them the needed instruc
tions and requirements for each
division and exhibit. Because of
variations In climatic conditions
hero in the county, tho areas of
Chiloquln, Fort Klumath, Klam
ath Agency, nnd Modoc Point
will be In separate competition
from tho rest of ho arcus. This
will give theso garden club mem
bers tho sumc opportunity to win
awards within their respective
areas.
Vegetables entered in tho gar
den show this year will bo divld
ci into the following clusscs or
da Islons.
Division li Vegetable garden
exhibit for boys und girls U to 12
years of age. Exhibit to consist
of fivo and no more, different
varieties.
DiTlsion 2i Vegetable gurden
exhibit for boys and girls 13
years and ovor. Exhibit to con
sist of fivo varieties, sumo as
above..
Division 3i Corn. Five ears for
all vegetable garden 4-Hcrs.
Division 4i Carrots. Five car-
r"l for all
4-llers.
Dlv U- a.
!;ds i.u-'diun, ,1,. b'K' r
gnrdn, 4-llori ,llltJ
Dlvl.lon 7i L.r..... 1
of (tlffen.nt kl,ils",:,l)W 1
Dlvl.U. ......
berries. . J
Division 1, n... 1
briihurMr.,xhThBrL.M
To a man whs',
handy with
his hanrli
If j oil llko mcchanlcil J
w.i.. HH.URH you re noiftj
eneivll K,.t - ... "II
-""" you thit i,
worth ooklni i -i- -
Helper In oim nf ik.' . 1
t the S. P shopsora
iunilili.,. . A14
.ni .." "oiivti
nm ui inuroaaini! . w.
something bio . find i5J
Inc more lnif.r.iin.
wnrl, PH.. ..'. U,MI
vun . . . a chnnce to ,J
.v...,, ii mji croil ,
outfit. Abovo nil, a Job
Permanent mmn,ny
you'll like. Liberal i(( ijij
New. higher WDi-.t n..J
pass nr v Honrs Pin. .1
imiiii. maaicui scrvlco. Vi
lions witn nav Kuwii t.
llvlllcs. This Is nn Hvk..:
... -."'w
vfliui lumiy. us (or I
wnos smcero in wntlii
right connection wllh the
outfit. If VOU Inin nn will,
we're nrottv sum vmrn ...
. , H (All
grei ii.
He or writ Tr.lMMBitu
P. Station. Klam.il. l.pH
or your nsaitit 8. P. Ag3
Dairy
Mrs. Clyde Horsley, accompan
ied by her mother and aunt, re
turned to Med ford, Oro., Wed
nesday, August 16. Mrs. Hors
Icy's folks arrived here. Tues
day, August 15, to attend a
shower given Mrs. Horsley In the
Owen Pcpple home, Bonanza.
Mrs. Horsley had spent tho last
coupio or weeks with Mr. and
Mrs. Joo Horsley and family.
Harry Kolb received word
that his brother, Carl Kolb was
killed In action in France, July
25. Kolb received word that his
brother had received shrapnel
wounds several weeks prior to
this last news. Carl was with
the tank division. His home was
In California.
Mrs. Blanch Nelson Is work
ing in the hop harvest in Grants
I'ass.
Bonita Gooch of Portland
visited last week with her grand.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Rueck and other relatives and
triends of this vicinity.
Mrs. William Bell accompany
led her daughter and , family
back to their home near Grants
Pass on Friday, August 18, to
visit tor some time.
I """ Now '
I Health & Accident I
for tho Senior Agci
HAVE YOUR
Upholstery and Rugs
CLEANED and REVIVED
Modern Nulifo Method
USE AGAIN SAME DAK
Falls Upholstery
& Rug Ssrvics
1332 Division Phon I
Man lo aga 1ft
Women to ago SO
AT St
YOUR
9Uut Jf. JfouiioH I
EQUITABLE LIFE I
Assurance Society . -
iiff
NEW kind of
ASPIRIN tablet
ioesn't upset stomseh
TJBWN you nsed quick fsllef from
" piiu.uoyouhsiltstttotskeaspirln
ttgeause It Itires you with an upset
gtomach? If to, this new medical die.
corery, SUPERIN, is "just what the
doctor ordered" for you.
fgparln Is ejialrln lus-conisjos the
im pure sale aspirin you have long
knownbut developed by doctors In
gpecial way for those upset by aspirin
in its ordinary form.
This new kino) of aspirin tablet dissolves
sner tulcky, lets the aspirin act ri'sbt
at the job of relieving pstp, reduces the
stldity of ordinary sapirjp, g,d d0,,
not Irritate or upset itomsch-eveoi
after repeated doses.
Tear this out to remind you to get
Superln today, so you can have it on
hand when headaches, colds, etc., atrike
See how quickly it
relieves pain how
fine you feel after tsk- fTJajSalii
inm. At vnnrjrtiffff Ill's. a!'!'.
15 and 39.
ENROLL NOW
With th
Klamath Business College
for
StpUmbtr 5
Present Location 325 Main
Phon 4760
fertilizer Orders!
Kaposi
OIIIIER NOW
Mllorlsls tabor Can
May Met Bt Available Laur
Pacific
Supply
Cooperative
Phone 4411
Xlamath Fills
Klamatr
Basin
.Cooperative"
Phone 4S
Tulelaks
Can You Quality?
Here Is Your
present and postwar
opportunity
DIESEL MECHANIC
. SERVICE-MAN
TROUBLE SHOOTKK
OPERATOR
..... nut
tor full information regarumj f,
TRAINING and PLACEMENT SERVIW
Jill out and mal followmgcoupo
Name
Streot ,.......
City State
Best tima to see me A. M
Interstate Tralnlna Service
' Weatherly BulldlnB
Portland 14, Oreoon
..."" j
, 1
-'-"Si